The Problem with “Impossible Dreams”

By |2015-07-04T09:49:00-05:00June 23rd, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, History, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics|

Motivational speakers, from what little exposure I have been forced to have with them, seem fond of telling people that they should “do the impossible.” This may well be simply part of the meaningless verbiage intended to get employees to pay attention to the context of the facts they face. To “think outside the box” [...]

A House of Many Mansions? Conservatism in the Boutique Age

By |2019-06-04T16:02:30-05:00June 11th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Featured, Russell Kirk|

There is a story, which if not true should be, that a student once regaled Russell Kirk with a listing of the different kinds of conservatism—libertarian, neo, paleo, and so on—then asked “which kind are you?” to which Kirk replied “I am a conservative.” I was reminded of this story when reading in these pages [...]

The Diversity Regime

By |2015-06-18T09:48:51-05:00June 5th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, Ideology, Liberalism, Virtue|

Diversity pervades American public life. It is a policy, an ideology, and a regime. That is, diversity is a full governing system its proponents want to spread throughout society, with its own rules, goods, rights, and duties. The goal is revolutionary—establishment of a new way of life in which chosen “differences” are affirmed and valued [...]

Diversity as Ideology: Autonomy and Recognition

By |2018-09-20T10:48:54-05:00May 27th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, Ideology, Politics|

Diversity has come a long way in the United States. Originally presented as a policy aimed at improving learning experiences and the ability of citizens to work, trade, and lead in an increasingly multicultural society, diversity has come to dominate American public and private life. Part of the power of this doctrine no doubt stems [...]

A Conflict of Ideologies: Autonomy, Recognition, and the Illusion of Diversity

By |2015-05-22T08:47:33-05:00May 18th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, Government, Liberalism, Politics|

Critics of liberalism, whether from the conservative right or the collectivist left, long have bemoaned its tendency to atomize society in the name of individual autonomy. The collectivist critique long has been recognized as somewhat ironic, of course. The utopian visions of ideologues like Karl Marx, who promised his New Socialist Man a life in [...]

Time for a Real Flat Tax?

By |2015-05-14T10:29:30-05:00May 11th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Featured, Politics, Taxes|

One does not hear much about the “flat tax” any longer. The idea lost its steam when people pointed out that, in order for it to significantly lower most people’s effective tax rate, it would have to include (that is, eliminate) some very well-entrenched tax breaks we all love. Most prominent among these is the [...]

We Are All Secretaries Now

By |2022-04-21T07:30:46-05:00April 22nd, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Senior Contributors|

We are all secretaries now, in the most demeaning sense of that term. Most people who work in offices now are responsible for their own clerical tasks. This is mostly the result of technology’s spread. April 22 is Secretaries’ Day. Actually, the official title has been changed to the more politically correct “Administrative Professionals’ Day.” [...]

Rights Fallout: “Economic Rights” and the Undevelopment of Poor Countries

By |2019-04-23T16:07:20-05:00March 31st, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Economics, Modernity, Rights|

The good intentions of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights took place in stages. Drafted in large measure as a response to the horrors of World War II and in the face of the continuing horrors of communism, the 1948 Declaration sought to “transcend” political, religious, and ethnic differences in the name of an [...]

Human Rights and the Problem of the Nation State

By |2019-09-03T15:09:01-05:00March 25th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Catholicism, Featured, Government, Humanities|

A surprising number of people who know about the United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted in 1948 and a focus of rights discussions around the world ever since, are unaware that its primary author was Jacques Maritain, a prominent Catholic philosopher. Much of the document’s language and reasoning might seem more in keeping [...]

When Did America Become France?

By |2020-08-06T07:52:10-05:00March 16th, 2015|Categories: Barack Obama, Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Featured, Politics, Presidency|

For more than a century now there has been a slow drift toward Presidential government in the United States, motivated by the desire to “get America moving,” to have “progress” through “efficient” government that is not saddled with the constitutional limits on which our entire way of life was based. It would appear that, at [...]

The Lies Told Across America

By |2015-03-09T02:27:08-05:00March 9th, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Ethics, Morality|

Past weeks have seen a great deal of attention paid to now-disgraced NBC Anchor Brian Williams and the lies that brought him down from the heights of status and popularity. Apparently it did not occur to Mr. Williams, or to his early supporters, that an anchorman’s “irrelevant” lies about his wartime exploits are something more [...]

England and Liberty: The Problem of Catholicism

By |2016-08-03T10:36:32-05:00February 23rd, 2015|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Catholicism, Christendom, England, Europe, History, Liberty|

It is undeniable that American constitutionalism and the ordered liberty it provides have historical roots in England. Nevertheless, one might be excused for finding it somewhat ironic that American Catholics join other Americans in seeing themselves as inheritors of a distinctly and specifically English liberty. England itself historically has not been particularly friendly toward religious [...]

Was Lincoln a Great Statesman?

By |2015-02-11T16:19:10-06:00February 12th, 2015|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Books, Bruce Frohnen, Statesman|

Abraham Lincoln Philosopher Statesman, Joseph R. Fornieri (Southern Illinois University Press, 2014) The twin goals of this book are so closely intertwined that it would be easy to see them as a unity. To do so would be unfortunate, however, because it would blind the reader to the important lessons Prof. Fornieri has to offer, [...]

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